Hello!

Thank you for finding your way to my campaign exploration fundraising page.  I'm Nat Hewett. I grew up in Raymond and Holden, Maine, the son of a father who dedicated his life to bettering the state of Maine by creating jobs and developing people and a mother who is dedicated to growing business activity in the small town for which she consults.  My parents instilled in me the Maine values of working hard, making a difference, and maintaining integrity in everything that you do.

Consequently, I cannot sit idly by as Susan Collins neglects her commitment not just to Maine values, but to the Maine people who voted her into the U.S. Senate four separate times.  It's time for a change. It's time to return to Maine values in the US Senate.  The Senate needs loud, passionate voices for the dwindling moderate wings of both of our parties and it's time for a fresh perspective on the moderate ideals that Maine voters expect and deserve from their Senator.  

Two years into the Trump Administration, it is clear that our senior senator is a moderate Mainer no more.  She is a right-wing Republican catering to the same electoral base that cheers the President's mocking of a sexual abuse survivor. She was a crucial vote in passing the Tax Reform bill that permanently slashed the corporate tax rate and generated billions of dollars for corporations while creating an unprecedented budget deficit and trying to fool people like you and me with a temporary personal tax cut.  

Susan Collins likes to pay lip service to her more moderate leanings - yes.  But the time for lip service is over. It is time for Maine people to have a US Senator that can once again bring the proud tradition of The Maine Way back to the Senate.

What is The Maine Way?

The Maine Way is Honest – you stand by the truth and own up to what you’ve done, even when it's hard.  Brett Kavanaugh demonstrably lied to the Senate judiciary committee. Susan Collins committed to her constituents in September that Brett Kavanaugh being dishonest to the committee would be disqualifying.  Susan Collins went back on her word.

The Maine Way is Tough - Politics is gritty work.  Susan Collins gave her vote to Tax Reform in exchange for "guarantees" that the GOP would help shore up the exchanges within the Affordable Care Act.  Those guarantees were nothing more than empty promises that have never been honored. Collins should have known better. But, too many times she has given her vote to the Republican right wing and gotten absolutely nothing in return.

The Maine Way is Fair - I was dealt a good hand to start life.  My family worked hard to become comfortable, and with my parent's support -- along with my own work-study and summer jobs -- I left college without debt. 1 in 7 Mainers live below the poverty line.  Common sense reforms to provide access to education and training opportunities while removing the shackles of crippling student loan debt are key to giving every young adult in our state and our country the same leg-up that I received.

The Maine Way is Decent - Disagreements happen.  I have many wonderful friends on both the left and right side of the aisle with whom I disagree.  We remain friends by maintaining our kindness, our empathy, and our desire to learn and understand the other's perspectives.  In the US. Senate, we have reached a point where the loudest voice in the room takes the mic and shouts down any attempt at discussion or compromise.  That's not how we treat each other - not in Maine - and we should hold our elected officials to that same bar.

The Maine Way is Compassionate – for people today and for generations to come.  The Republican ruling class is mortgaging our future as well as the future of our children and grandchildren in order to line the pockets of corporations and their wealthy donors.  Our national debt needs to be addressed to ensure that we will be able to care for our parents as they age and our children as they grow up while leaving a stable, sound economy for our grandchildren and beyond.

The Maine Way is The Way Life Should Be - Nothing I've written should be controversial to the Mainers reading this page.  This is how each and every one of us was raised. We all get one life here on earth; let's make the most of it with those we have the privilege of sharing it with.

My childhood in Maine instilled the values of The Maine Way in me from a young age.  I grew up and became the person I am today in our state. Let's get this out of the way up front - I've been away from Maine for a time.  After my four years at John Bapst Memorial High School in Bangor (go Crusaders!), I attended college in Massachusetts and have spent the first seven years of my professional career in Boston and, most recently, Chicago.  I have grown my career and gained exposure to the multitude of experiences our great country has to offer.  But let's be clear, Maine is my home. Always has been - always will be. 

It's time for me to serve the people of Maine and to shape sound public policy to create more opportunities for kids in Maine to build their lives in Maine.  Our country needs more Maine families, and no parent should be forced to watch their children raise their grandchildren away from them because opportunity and prosperity are not available at home. Mainers are looking for a fair shake, not a handout.  If I were your Senator, I would push for responsible fiscal policies that will stabilize our social safety net for those who are in times of need while addressing our ballooning national debt and the crisis it creates for future generations.  I would work with my colleagues - at home and in Washington - to support innovation, entrepreneurship, and trade policies that will help grow the Maine economy and create new high paying jobs. It's time to create the same welcoming, inclusive spirit - the spirit embedded in the DNA of Mainers that allows us all to get along even when we disagree - in Washington, DC and the rest of our country. It's time to create change, and that change starts by electing a US Senator in 2020 who will stand up for the Maine Way.

Help me bring The Maine Way to Washington.  Return Honesty, Toughness, Fairness, Decency and Compassion to a place in desperate need of it.  Our Senior Senator has fallen well short of The Maine Way and it’s time for her to learn that Maine people won't stand for that.  It's time for change; it’s time for a young, Maine Senator to bring The Maine Way to Washington, DC, the same way Margaret Chase Smith, Edmund Muskie, George Mitchell, and Bill Cohen did in their days.  I will not let you down!


[Please note that pledges will be used for exploring the feasibility of candidacy.  Once feasibility is ascertained, any  funds would transfer to the established campaign.] 


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November 2, 2018

A Problematic Ballot Initiative - Three Issues with Maine's Question 1

When Maine voters go to the polls on Tuesday, Mainer's will face choices beyond whether to re-elect Senator King and who should inherit the Blaine House.  There are also 5 ballot questions voters will decide on.  Four are relatively innocuous bond questions (seeking a collective $200M in new public debt to invest in public infrastructure and higher education).  The remaining question - Question 1 - is a different animal.

Question 1 seeks to assess a 3.8% state income tax on income over $128,400 to create a trust fund that must be spent to provide Universal Home Care to Maine Seniors or those with disabilities.  The initiative would raise $310 million dollars annually in incremental tax revenue.  Providing an avenue for people to stay in their homes is a lofty endeavor; however, this ballot initiative has flaws on both sides that are being glossed over in its debate.  

And those flaws bring to light some drawbacks of ballot initiatives in general.  Here are three that I see:

1) Ballot initiatives become battles of special interests, not the people's interests.  

The debate on Question 1 raised $3,000,000 - very little of which came from small or local donors.  On the "Yes" side, the two largest donors were the Service Employers International Union - who is recognized as a constituent within the full text of the proposed legislation - and a Venture Capital firm based in Silicon Valley.  The two contributed more than $600K to the campaign.

The "No" side is not any better.  The two largest single donors are the Maine Association of Realtors and the National Association of Realtors - whose joint contributions total $165K.  The cynic in me sees their incentive to oppose a measure aimed at keeping people in their homes.

2) Ballot initiatives force the debate to the media.  

We deserve a thorough debate when earmarking hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayer money for a specific cause is on the table.  That is not what we've gotten here.  Instead we have a simplistic view of "we should provide access to home care" on the one side and "we can't afford a tax increase" on the other.  Both sides may be right - but when the debate is limited to an up or down vote on a solution, the incentive is for each side to shout loudest rather than articulate why their outcome is preferable.

3) Ballot initiatives force a narrow solution on a broad problem.

Ballot initiatives are often the most prescriptive versions of legislative proposals.  In this case, there is no discretion with how the pool of money is spent which will stamp out innovation within the space.  Question 1 attempts to throw money at a problem and hope a solution unfolds rather than a plan to provide the best solution for the Mainers in need of this support.  We need to set up initiatives that incentivize innovation and efficiency within the policy rather than writing a check to fund the solutions in-place today.

Question 1 is likely to pass in Maine, just as an earlier iteration with funding earmarked for education passed in 2016.  The goals in both initiatives were laudable (quality education and improved access to in-home care), but we need to constantly be looking for better ways to provide social services to more people at a lower cost instead of settling for a bandaid that will become more burdensome over time as Maine - the oldest state in the country - continues to age and it's tax base becomes smaller.  

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